A. completely true (and it has to be 20 characters so i added words)
This is the rhyme scheme in this poem: ABBAABBACDCDCD.
What this means is that each letter which is repeated rhymes with each other. So A refers to lines 1, 4, 5, and 8, which all rhyme. B refers to lines 2, 3, 6, and 7, which all rhyme. C refers to lines 9, 11, and 13, which all rhyme. D refers to lines 10, 12, and 14, which all rhyme.
Answer:
The summary of Who Can Replace a Man? Brian Aldiss describe a future in the world where machines can think of the task they are designed to do. One day the machines realize that the few remaining humans were dead, leaving the machines to fend for themselves.
Answer:
Smith wrote A Tree Grows in Brooklyn to inform others about what it was like growing up in a small neighborhood in Brooklyn in the early 1900s. In one chapter, she recalls "with a peculiar tenderness" how Brooklynites celebrated Thanksgiving (Smith 1). Smith's use of cultural terminology, such as "ragamuffin" or "slamming gates," helps the reader better understand the language used by children in the Williamsburg neighborhood at that point in history. Her detailed description of the children's selection of costumes reveals the popular culture of the time and tensions between the poor and rich of the town (1). Smith dwells not only on the cultural details of early Brooklyn, but she also describes emotional experiences of growing up poor. Although the children in Francie's classroom are hungry, they are "too proud to accept charitable food. . . . ," even when that food is about to be thrown away (3). For these children, dignity is more important than satisfying hunger pangs. Smith's careful attention to cultural, historical, and emotional details informs the reader of what it was like to grow up in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in the early 1900s.